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1000 results for “ctoney”
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2000 Yankees Diary: Coney’s rough 2000 continues https://www.rawchili.com/mlb/206968/ #alley #Baseball #coney #continues #diary #ExcludeFromStnVideo #FrontPage #Minnesota #MinnesotaTwins #MinnesotaTwins #MLB #pinstripe #rough #s #Twins #Yankees #YankeesHistoryTrivia
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So sad to see coney come to an end, always one if my favourite examples of transdisciplinary playful art in practice https://coneyhq.org/ #coney #theatre #play #playfulArts
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Why Amy Coney Barrett's DECISIONS Are SPARKING #MAGA OUTRAGE
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HtoXv5wLGYw&feature=youtu.be #usa #video #podcast #usa #us #unitedstates #america #canada #europe #eu #trump #musk #donaldtrump #tech #eu #press #news #politics #meda #tariffs #ai #tv #stockmarket #russia #ukraine #israel
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𝗜𝗲𝗿𝘀𝗲 𝗯𝗼𝗸𝘀𝗲𝗿 𝗝𝗼𝗵𝗻 𝗖𝗼𝗼𝗻𝗲𝘆 (28) 𝗼𝘃𝗲𝗿𝗹𝗲𝗱𝗲𝗻: 𝗿𝗮𝗮𝗸𝘁𝗲 𝗴𝗲𝘄𝗼𝗻𝗱 𝘁𝗶𝗷𝗱𝗲𝗻𝘀 𝘁𝗶𝘁𝗲𝗹𝗴𝗲𝘃𝗲𝗰𝗵𝘁
Een Ierse bokser is overleden nadat hij vorige week gewond was geraakt tijdens een titelgevecht in Belfast. Het gaat om de 28-jarige John Cooney. Hij lag sinds de wedstrijd op de intensive care. "Kapot van verdriet moeten we melden dat hij na een week vechten voor zijn...
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Supreme Court Justice Amy Coney Barret asked a team of ACLU lawyers advocating for trans rights if trans people had ever really been discriminated against.
#WomensRights #Trans #EqualJustice
https://newrepublic.com/post/189029/amy-coney-barrett-question-supreme-court-transgender-case-hearing -
Supreme Court Justice Amy Coney Barret asked a team of ACLU lawyers advocating for trans rights if trans people had ever really been discriminated against.
#WomensRights #Trans #EqualJustice
https://newrepublic.com/post/189029/amy-coney-barrett-question-supreme-court-transgender-case-hearing -
Supreme Court Justice Amy Coney Barret asked a team of ACLU lawyers advocating for trans rights if trans people had ever really been discriminated against.
#WomensRights #Trans #EqualJustice
https://newrepublic.com/post/189029/amy-coney-barrett-question-supreme-court-transgender-case-hearing -
Supreme Court Justice Amy Coney Barret asked a team of ACLU lawyers advocating for trans rights if trans people had ever really been discriminated against.
#WomensRights #Trans #EqualJustice
https://newrepublic.com/post/189029/amy-coney-barrett-question-supreme-court-transgender-case-hearing -
Supreme Court Justice Amy Coney Barret asked a team of ACLU lawyers advocating for trans rights if trans people had ever really been discriminated against.
#WomensRights #Trans #EqualJustice
https://newrepublic.com/post/189029/amy-coney-barrett-question-supreme-court-transgender-case-hearing -
Timothy Manus Cooney (born December 19, 1990) is an American former #professionalBaseball #pitcher. He played in #MajorLeagueBaseball (#MLB) for the #StLouisCardinals. The Cardinals selected him in the third round of the 2012 #amateurDraft after attending #WakeForestUniversity and playing #collegeBaseball for the #DemonDeacons. He made his major league debut on April 30, 2015.
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A walk at Coney Island. The park is really old school and a bit rotten by time and salt. #NYC #ConeyIsland #LunaPark
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#BehindTheScenes
#WonderWheel (2017)
On Coney Island in the 1950s, a lifeguard tells the story of a middle-aged carousel operator, his beleaguered wife and the visitor who turns their lives upside-down.Director #WoodyAllen discusses scene with #JustinTimberlake
#FilmMastodon 📽️ 🎬 -
Trump introduced Amy Coney #Barrett as his nominee in the Rose Garden, in the same place where Bill Clinton introduced Ginsburg in 1993.
Back then, Dannenfelser was 27 and dreaming of carving out a more powerful place for conservative anti-abortion women in Washington.
That was half a lifetime ago. Now, at 54, she and those women sat in the Rose Garden watching Barrett,
a Catholic mother of seven whom Trump had said he had been “saving” to succeed Ginsburg,
become the avatar of the culture they wanted to usher in for America.Barrett was both Christian supermom and high-powered legal scholar,
elite and outsider,
a combination of the more secular conservative Federalist Society credentials
and the beliefs of the emerging Christian legal movement.This new iteration of conservative feminism didn’t argue that women’s gains should be rolled back
or that women should not be professionally ambitious.But it wanted those advances not to come at the expense of ideals of motherhood,
Christian morality
and the centrality of human life at conception.Seven days before the 2020 presidential election,
Leonard Leo tuned in from his home in Maine to watch his close friend
Clarence Thomas swear in Barrett to the court.Watching her raise her right hand felt like the culmination of the entire project.
It was, he said in an interview,
“exhilarating.”Trump had become the most successful anti-abortion president America had ever known.
His administration transformed the judiciary.
With his speech to the March for Life in 2020
— the first time a sitting president attended
— and graphic comments in his 2019 State of the Union address about how abortion providers “execute a baby,”
he changed political expectations and red lines for Republican presidents.What Trump and his Republican allies had done was to change the country
by leveraging political force to conquer the courts.Trump had promised conservative Christians that
“Christianity will have power.”And now that vision was at the center of a Republican Party they had remade.
Scott #Stewart had never set foot in Mississippi.
But Donald Trump’s defeat in the 2020 election thrust the young lawyer from the Department of Justice onto the job market,
and Lynn #Fitch, Mississippi’s attorney general, had reached out.She needed a new solicitor general to lead the state’s biggest cases.
Fitch’s team found Stewart’s name tucked into a pile of résumés from the Republican Attorneys General Association,
a group that had received more than $13 million from Leo’s network of organizations
and whose executive director used to work for the Federalist Society.(8/n)
#Currie #Taylor #Fiedorek #Burke #Dannenfelser #AllianceDefendingFreedom #fedsoc #FederalistSociety #viability #Roberts #Kennedy #Alito #Leonard #Leo #Misha #Tseytlin
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Trump introduced Amy Coney #Barrett as his nominee in the Rose Garden, in the same place where Bill Clinton introduced Ginsburg in 1993.
Back then, Dannenfelser was 27 and dreaming of carving out a more powerful place for conservative anti-abortion women in Washington.
That was half a lifetime ago. Now, at 54, she and those women sat in the Rose Garden watching Barrett,
a Catholic mother of seven whom Trump had said he had been “saving” to succeed Ginsburg,
become the avatar of the culture they wanted to usher in for America.Barrett was both Christian supermom and high-powered legal scholar,
elite and outsider,
a combination of the more secular conservative Federalist Society credentials
and the beliefs of the emerging Christian legal movement.This new iteration of conservative feminism didn’t argue that women’s gains should be rolled back
or that women should not be professionally ambitious.But it wanted those advances not to come at the expense of ideals of motherhood,
Christian morality
and the centrality of human life at conception.Seven days before the 2020 presidential election,
Leonard Leo tuned in from his home in Maine to watch his close friend
Clarence Thomas swear in Barrett to the court.Watching her raise her right hand felt like the culmination of the entire project.
It was, he said in an interview,
“exhilarating.”Trump had become the most successful anti-abortion president America had ever known.
His administration transformed the judiciary.
With his speech to the March for Life in 2020
— the first time a sitting president attended
— and graphic comments in his 2019 State of the Union address about how abortion providers “execute a baby,”
he changed political expectations and red lines for Republican presidents.What Trump and his Republican allies had done was to change the country
by leveraging political force to conquer the courts.Trump had promised conservative Christians that
“Christianity will have power.”And now that vision was at the center of a Republican Party they had remade.
Scott #Stewart had never set foot in Mississippi.
But Donald Trump’s defeat in the 2020 election thrust the young lawyer from the Department of Justice onto the job market,
and Lynn #Fitch, Mississippi’s attorney general, had reached out.She needed a new solicitor general to lead the state’s biggest cases.
Fitch’s team found Stewart’s name tucked into a pile of résumés from the Republican Attorneys General Association,
a group that had received more than $13 million from Leo’s network of organizations
and whose executive director used to work for the Federalist Society.(8/n)
#Currie #Taylor #Fiedorek #Burke #Dannenfelser #AllianceDefendingFreedom #fedsoc #FederalistSociety #viability #Roberts #Kennedy #Alito #Leonard #Leo #Misha #Tseytlin
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Trump introduced Amy Coney #Barrett as his nominee in the Rose Garden, in the same place where Bill Clinton introduced Ginsburg in 1993.
Back then, Dannenfelser was 27 and dreaming of carving out a more powerful place for conservative anti-abortion women in Washington.
That was half a lifetime ago. Now, at 54, she and those women sat in the Rose Garden watching Barrett,
a Catholic mother of seven whom Trump had said he had been “saving” to succeed Ginsburg,
become the avatar of the culture they wanted to usher in for America.Barrett was both Christian supermom and high-powered legal scholar,
elite and outsider,
a combination of the more secular conservative Federalist Society credentials
and the beliefs of the emerging Christian legal movement.This new iteration of conservative feminism didn’t argue that women’s gains should be rolled back
or that women should not be professionally ambitious.But it wanted those advances not to come at the expense of ideals of motherhood,
Christian morality
and the centrality of human life at conception.Seven days before the 2020 presidential election,
Leonard Leo tuned in from his home in Maine to watch his close friend
Clarence Thomas swear in Barrett to the court.Watching her raise her right hand felt like the culmination of the entire project.
It was, he said in an interview,
“exhilarating.”Trump had become the most successful anti-abortion president America had ever known.
His administration transformed the judiciary.
With his speech to the March for Life in 2020
— the first time a sitting president attended
— and graphic comments in his 2019 State of the Union address about how abortion providers “execute a baby,”
he changed political expectations and red lines for Republican presidents.What Trump and his Republican allies had done was to change the country
by leveraging political force to conquer the courts.Trump had promised conservative Christians that
“Christianity will have power.”And now that vision was at the center of a Republican Party they had remade.
Scott #Stewart had never set foot in Mississippi.
But Donald Trump’s defeat in the 2020 election thrust the young lawyer from the Department of Justice onto the job market,
and Lynn #Fitch, Mississippi’s attorney general, had reached out.She needed a new solicitor general to lead the state’s biggest cases.
Fitch’s team found Stewart’s name tucked into a pile of résumés from the Republican Attorneys General Association,
a group that had received more than $13 million from Leo’s network of organizations
and whose executive director used to work for the Federalist Society.(8/n)
#Currie #Taylor #Fiedorek #Burke #Dannenfelser #AllianceDefendingFreedom #fedsoc #FederalistSociety #viability #Roberts #Kennedy #Alito #Leonard #Leo #Misha #Tseytlin
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Trump introduced Amy Coney #Barrett as his nominee in the Rose Garden, in the same place where Bill Clinton introduced Ginsburg in 1993.
Back then, Dannenfelser was 27 and dreaming of carving out a more powerful place for conservative anti-abortion women in Washington.
That was half a lifetime ago. Now, at 54, she and those women sat in the Rose Garden watching Barrett,
a Catholic mother of seven whom Trump had said he had been “saving” to succeed Ginsburg,
become the avatar of the culture they wanted to usher in for America.Barrett was both Christian supermom and high-powered legal scholar,
elite and outsider,
a combination of the more secular conservative Federalist Society credentials
and the beliefs of the emerging Christian legal movement.This new iteration of conservative feminism didn’t argue that women’s gains should be rolled back
or that women should not be professionally ambitious.But it wanted those advances not to come at the expense of ideals of motherhood,
Christian morality
and the centrality of human life at conception.Seven days before the 2020 presidential election,
Leonard Leo tuned in from his home in Maine to watch his close friend
Clarence Thomas swear in Barrett to the court.Watching her raise her right hand felt like the culmination of the entire project.
It was, he said in an interview,
“exhilarating.”Trump had become the most successful anti-abortion president America had ever known.
His administration transformed the judiciary.
With his speech to the March for Life in 2020
— the first time a sitting president attended
— and graphic comments in his 2019 State of the Union address about how abortion providers “execute a baby,”
he changed political expectations and red lines for Republican presidents.What Trump and his Republican allies had done was to change the country
by leveraging political force to conquer the courts.Trump had promised conservative Christians that
“Christianity will have power.”And now that vision was at the center of a Republican Party they had remade.
Scott #Stewart had never set foot in Mississippi.
But Donald Trump’s defeat in the 2020 election thrust the young lawyer from the Department of Justice onto the job market,
and Lynn #Fitch, Mississippi’s attorney general, had reached out.She needed a new solicitor general to lead the state’s biggest cases.
Fitch’s team found Stewart’s name tucked into a pile of résumés from the Republican Attorneys General Association,
a group that had received more than $13 million from Leo’s network of organizations
and whose executive director used to work for the Federalist Society.(8/n)
#Currie #Taylor #Fiedorek #Burke #Dannenfelser #AllianceDefendingFreedom #fedsoc #FederalistSociety #viability #Roberts #Kennedy #Alito #Leonard #Leo #Misha #Tseytlin
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Trump introduced Amy Coney #Barrett as his nominee in the Rose Garden, in the same place where Bill Clinton introduced Ginsburg in 1993.
Back then, Dannenfelser was 27 and dreaming of carving out a more powerful place for conservative anti-abortion women in Washington.
That was half a lifetime ago. Now, at 54, she and those women sat in the Rose Garden watching Barrett,
a Catholic mother of seven whom Trump had said he had been “saving” to succeed Ginsburg,
become the avatar of the culture they wanted to usher in for America.Barrett was both Christian supermom and high-powered legal scholar,
elite and outsider,
a combination of the more secular conservative Federalist Society credentials
and the beliefs of the emerging Christian legal movement.This new iteration of conservative feminism didn’t argue that women’s gains should be rolled back
or that women should not be professionally ambitious.But it wanted those advances not to come at the expense of ideals of motherhood,
Christian morality
and the centrality of human life at conception.Seven days before the 2020 presidential election,
Leonard Leo tuned in from his home in Maine to watch his close friend
Clarence Thomas swear in Barrett to the court.Watching her raise her right hand felt like the culmination of the entire project.
It was, he said in an interview,
“exhilarating.”Trump had become the most successful anti-abortion president America had ever known.
His administration transformed the judiciary.
With his speech to the March for Life in 2020
— the first time a sitting president attended
— and graphic comments in his 2019 State of the Union address about how abortion providers “execute a baby,”
he changed political expectations and red lines for Republican presidents.What Trump and his Republican allies had done was to change the country
by leveraging political force to conquer the courts.Trump had promised conservative Christians that
“Christianity will have power.”And now that vision was at the center of a Republican Party they had remade.
Scott #Stewart had never set foot in Mississippi.
But Donald Trump’s defeat in the 2020 election thrust the young lawyer from the Department of Justice onto the job market,
and Lynn #Fitch, Mississippi’s attorney general, had reached out.She needed a new solicitor general to lead the state’s biggest cases.
Fitch’s team found Stewart’s name tucked into a pile of résumés from the Republican Attorneys General Association,
a group that had received more than $13 million from Leo’s network of organizations
and whose executive director used to work for the Federalist Society.(8/n)
#Currie #Taylor #Fiedorek #Burke #Dannenfelser #AllianceDefendingFreedom #fedsoc #FederalistSociety #viability #Roberts #Kennedy #Alito #Leonard #Leo #Misha #Tseytlin
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“The Amy Coney Barrett Show”
Amy is a single woman who moves to Minneapolis and lands a job as a producer at the local news station. Disgusted by the progressive leanings of her boss, Lou Grant, and repulsed by the liberal feminism that pervades 1970s Minnesota, Amy sets out to hire a worthy male to take her job as producer, find a husband to obey, and spread conservative family “values”. 🤢
#PoliticalSitcoms #AmyConeyBarrett #MaryTylerMooreShow #HashTagGames @hashtaggames
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“The Amy Coney Barrett Show”
Amy is a single woman who moves to Minneapolis and lands a job as a producer at the local news station. Disgusted by the progressive leanings of her boss, Lou Grant, and repulsed by the liberal feminism that pervades 1970s Minnesota, Amy sets out to hire a worthy male to take her job as producer, find a husband to obey, and spread conservative family “values”. 🤢
#PoliticalSitcoms #AmyConeyBarrett #MaryTylerMooreShow #HashTagGames @hashtaggames
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“The Amy Coney Barrett Show”
Amy is a single woman who moves to Minneapolis and lands a job as a producer at the local news station. Disgusted by the progressive leanings of her boss, Lou Grant, and repulsed by the liberal feminism that pervades 1970s Minnesota, Amy sets out to hire a worthy male to take her job as producer, find a husband to obey, and spread conservative family “values”. 🤢
#PoliticalSitcoms #AmyConeyBarrett #MaryTylerMooreShow #HashTagGames @hashtaggames
-
“The Amy Coney Barrett Show”
Amy is a single woman who moves to Minneapolis and lands a job as a producer at the local news station. Disgusted by the progressive leanings of her boss, Lou Grant, and repulsed by the liberal feminism that pervades 1970s Minnesota, Amy sets out to hire a worthy male to take her job as producer, find a husband to obey, and spread conservative family “values”. 🤢
#PoliticalSitcoms #AmyConeyBarrett #MaryTylerMooreShow #HashTagGames @hashtaggames
-
“The Amy Coney Barrett Show”
Amy is a single woman who moves to Minneapolis and lands a job as a producer at the local news station. Disgusted by the progressive leanings of her boss, Lou Grant, and repulsed by the liberal feminism that pervades 1970s Minnesota, Amy sets out to hire a worthy male to take her job as producer, find a husband to obey, and spread conservative family “values”. 🤢
#PoliticalSitcoms #AmyConeyBarrett #MaryTylerMooreShow #HashTagGames @hashtaggames
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CW: Kai, food.
Amazing lamb at Coney in #Martinborough last night, and for lunch we headed to Aroma India rather than the white-people food joints in the town square. Result: best lamb Iʼve ever had, and the most filling Indian restaurant food. #Wairarapa #Aotearoa #NZ #food #travel #kai
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CW: Kai, food.
Amazing lamb at Coney in #Martinborough last night, and for lunch we headed to Aroma India rather than the white-people food joints in the town square. Result: best lamb Iʼve ever had, and the most filling Indian restaurant food. #Wairarapa #Aotearoa #NZ #food #travel #kai
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CW: Kai, food.
Amazing lamb at Coney in #Martinborough last night, and for lunch we headed to Aroma India rather than the white-people food joints in the town square. Result: best lamb Iʼve ever had, and the most filling Indian restaurant food. #Wairarapa #Aotearoa #NZ #food #travel #kai
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Justice #Amy #Coney #Barrett’s opinion was just a page long, all of two paragraphs.
But in distancing herself from both blocs in Monday’s nominally unanimous Supreme Court decision rejecting a constitutional challenge to former President Donald J. Trump’s eligibility to hold office, she staked out a distinctive role.Justice Barrett was the third of Mr. Trump’s appointees, rushed onto the court after the death of Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg, arriving just before the 2020 election. But she is viewed as one of the more moderate members, relatively speaking, of the court’s six-member conservative supermajority. At oral arguments, she can convey a mix of intellectual seriousness and common sense.
In public appearances, she is adamant that the court is apolitical, though she sometimes says so in venues that undercut her message.
In 2021, for instance, Justice Barrett told an audience in Kentucky that “my goal today is to convince you that this court is not comprised of a bunch of partisan hacks.”
-- She was speaking at the University of Louisville’s McConnell Center, after an introduction by Senator #Mitch #McConnell, Republican of Kentucky and the minority leader, who helped found the center and was instrumental in ensuring her confirmation. Last year, she was the featured speaker at the annual gala of the #Federalist #Society, the conservative legal group.“This suit was brought by Colorado voters under state law in state court,” Justice Barrett wrote.
👉“It does not require us to address the complicated question whether federal legislation is the exclusive vehicle through which Section 3 can be enforced.”Having established that she sided with her liberal colleagues on the #substance of what they had to say, she questioned their #tone, calling it #strident.
Members of the court who disagree with the majority, she said, face a choice, adding that her colleagues had made the wrong one.
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Justice #Amy #Coney #Barrett’s opinion was just a page long, all of two paragraphs.
But in distancing herself from both blocs in Monday’s nominally unanimous Supreme Court decision rejecting a constitutional challenge to former President Donald J. Trump’s eligibility to hold office, she staked out a distinctive role.Justice Barrett was the third of Mr. Trump’s appointees, rushed onto the court after the death of Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg, arriving just before the 2020 election. But she is viewed as one of the more moderate members, relatively speaking, of the court’s six-member conservative supermajority. At oral arguments, she can convey a mix of intellectual seriousness and common sense.
In public appearances, she is adamant that the court is apolitical, though she sometimes says so in venues that undercut her message.
In 2021, for instance, Justice Barrett told an audience in Kentucky that “my goal today is to convince you that this court is not comprised of a bunch of partisan hacks.”
-- She was speaking at the University of Louisville’s McConnell Center, after an introduction by Senator #Mitch #McConnell, Republican of Kentucky and the minority leader, who helped found the center and was instrumental in ensuring her confirmation. Last year, she was the featured speaker at the annual gala of the #Federalist #Society, the conservative legal group.“This suit was brought by Colorado voters under state law in state court,” Justice Barrett wrote.
👉“It does not require us to address the complicated question whether federal legislation is the exclusive vehicle through which Section 3 can be enforced.”Having established that she sided with her liberal colleagues on the #substance of what they had to say, she questioned their #tone, calling it #strident.
Members of the court who disagree with the majority, she said, face a choice, adding that her colleagues had made the wrong one.
-
Justice #Amy #Coney #Barrett’s opinion was just a page long, all of two paragraphs.
But in distancing herself from both blocs in Monday’s nominally unanimous Supreme Court decision rejecting a constitutional challenge to former President Donald J. Trump’s eligibility to hold office, she staked out a distinctive role.Justice Barrett was the third of Mr. Trump’s appointees, rushed onto the court after the death of Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg, arriving just before the 2020 election. But she is viewed as one of the more moderate members, relatively speaking, of the court’s six-member conservative supermajority. At oral arguments, she can convey a mix of intellectual seriousness and common sense.
In public appearances, she is adamant that the court is apolitical, though she sometimes says so in venues that undercut her message.
In 2021, for instance, Justice Barrett told an audience in Kentucky that “my goal today is to convince you that this court is not comprised of a bunch of partisan hacks.”
-- She was speaking at the University of Louisville’s McConnell Center, after an introduction by Senator #Mitch #McConnell, Republican of Kentucky and the minority leader, who helped found the center and was instrumental in ensuring her confirmation. Last year, she was the featured speaker at the annual gala of the #Federalist #Society, the conservative legal group.“This suit was brought by Colorado voters under state law in state court,” Justice Barrett wrote.
👉“It does not require us to address the complicated question whether federal legislation is the exclusive vehicle through which Section 3 can be enforced.”Having established that she sided with her liberal colleagues on the #substance of what they had to say, she questioned their #tone, calling it #strident.
Members of the court who disagree with the majority, she said, face a choice, adding that her colleagues had made the wrong one.
-
Justice #Amy #Coney #Barrett’s opinion was just a page long, all of two paragraphs.
But in distancing herself from both blocs in Monday’s nominally unanimous Supreme Court decision rejecting a constitutional challenge to former President Donald J. Trump’s eligibility to hold office, she staked out a distinctive role.Justice Barrett was the third of Mr. Trump’s appointees, rushed onto the court after the death of Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg, arriving just before the 2020 election. But she is viewed as one of the more moderate members, relatively speaking, of the court’s six-member conservative supermajority. At oral arguments, she can convey a mix of intellectual seriousness and common sense.
In public appearances, she is adamant that the court is apolitical, though she sometimes says so in venues that undercut her message.
In 2021, for instance, Justice Barrett told an audience in Kentucky that “my goal today is to convince you that this court is not comprised of a bunch of partisan hacks.”
-- She was speaking at the University of Louisville’s McConnell Center, after an introduction by Senator #Mitch #McConnell, Republican of Kentucky and the minority leader, who helped found the center and was instrumental in ensuring her confirmation. Last year, she was the featured speaker at the annual gala of the #Federalist #Society, the conservative legal group.“This suit was brought by Colorado voters under state law in state court,” Justice Barrett wrote.
👉“It does not require us to address the complicated question whether federal legislation is the exclusive vehicle through which Section 3 can be enforced.”Having established that she sided with her liberal colleagues on the #substance of what they had to say, she questioned their #tone, calling it #strident.
Members of the court who disagree with the majority, she said, face a choice, adding that her colleagues had made the wrong one.
-
Justice #Amy #Coney #Barrett’s opinion was just a page long, all of two paragraphs.
But in distancing herself from both blocs in Monday’s nominally unanimous Supreme Court decision rejecting a constitutional challenge to former President Donald J. Trump’s eligibility to hold office, she staked out a distinctive role.Justice Barrett was the third of Mr. Trump’s appointees, rushed onto the court after the death of Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg, arriving just before the 2020 election. But she is viewed as one of the more moderate members, relatively speaking, of the court’s six-member conservative supermajority. At oral arguments, she can convey a mix of intellectual seriousness and common sense.
In public appearances, she is adamant that the court is apolitical, though she sometimes says so in venues that undercut her message.
In 2021, for instance, Justice Barrett told an audience in Kentucky that “my goal today is to convince you that this court is not comprised of a bunch of partisan hacks.”
-- She was speaking at the University of Louisville’s McConnell Center, after an introduction by Senator #Mitch #McConnell, Republican of Kentucky and the minority leader, who helped found the center and was instrumental in ensuring her confirmation. Last year, she was the featured speaker at the annual gala of the #Federalist #Society, the conservative legal group.“This suit was brought by Colorado voters under state law in state court,” Justice Barrett wrote.
👉“It does not require us to address the complicated question whether federal legislation is the exclusive vehicle through which Section 3 can be enforced.”Having established that she sided with her liberal colleagues on the #substance of what they had to say, she questioned their #tone, calling it #strident.
Members of the court who disagree with the majority, she said, face a choice, adding that her colleagues had made the wrong one.